Race of Champions (1988-2018): 30 years of spectacle and racing fun

Thirty years ago, in 1988, the Race of Champions (ROC) was organized for the first time as a special event for rally drivers to celebrate the tenth anniversary of the WRC drivers’ competitions and as a memorial event to remember prematurely lost rally ace Henri Toivonen.

Today, the Race of Champions is probably the most popular international motorsport event which is gathering together racing drivers from various racing disciplines from all over the world to race against each other in identical cars.

Fredrik Johnsson is the ROC organiser from the beginning

‘Champion of the Champions’ title for nineteen drivers

The best among them are carrying the title Champion of the Champions. The list of winners is a proof how strong event is the Race of Champions because it features the names of nineteen (until 2017) racing aces and racing legends who have numerous world championship titles on their accounts, not counting all other championship titles collected across the world.

Eight world rally champions at the inaugural ROC meeting

The inaugural ROC meeting was first organized in 1988 by former rally driver Michele Mouton and Fredrik Johnsson from IMP (International Media Productions). The first event took place at the Autodrome de Linas-Montlhery near Paris.

The ROC visited Nürburgring, Barcelona and Madrid

In 1989, Nürburgring hosted the Race of Champions and Stig Blomqvist was the best among eight rally champions. In 1990, when the ROC took place in Barcelona, the event had been expanded with the International Rally Masters contest, designed to allow drivers who were not champions yet to qualify for the main event. Kenneth Eriksson was the first IRM winner while Stig Blomqvist repeated the ROC victory.

In 1991, the event took place in Madrid. Juha Kankkunen became the Champion of the Champions for the second time, beating Didier Auriol in the final.

During a Gran Canaria period, the Classic Masters contest was introduced in 1994 and discontinued in 1999. The Rally Masters contest was on a programme until 2000. The ROC Legends and Junior Rally Masters were also part of a programme between 1999 and 2003, with Stig Blomqvist and Francois Duval as the multiple winners.

Nations Cup was introduced in 1999

In 1999, the Nations Cup was introduced and it’s still a part of the ROC event. The Nations Cup brought circuit racing drivers and motorcycle drivers into the competition. In the beginning, teams had three drivers from each category (rally, circuit, moto). The first winners were Tommi Makinen, JJ Lehto and Kari Tiainen (Team Finland).

Two years later, non-rally drivers were allowed to compete in the main ROC event but the rally drivers retained their dominance and scored victories.

Since 2004, the Race of Champions is a stadium-based event

Leaving Canary in 2004, three events at Stade de France

In 2004, the Race of Champions left Gran Canaria and since then the event adapted its format to stadium-based tracks. The new venue in 2004 was Stade de France in Saint-Denis near Paris.

The change from gravel to tarmac circuits saw rally drivers lose their dominance and the first non-rally driver won the event. It was Heikki Kovalainen, who came to event as a champion of the World Series by Nissan. In the final, he beat Sebastien Loeb. Another change in 2004 was that Nations Cup teams had two drivers instead of three.

Unbeatable duo – Sebastian Vettel and Michael Schumacher

Six consecutive Nations Cup wins for Schumacher, Vettel

After three events at Stade de France, the new venue in 2007 was London’s Wembley Stadium.In that event, Michael Schumacher and Sebastian Vettel clinched their first victory for Team Germany in the Nations Cup.

In the next five years, the stadiums were changing (London, Beijing, Düsseldorf, Bangkok) but the Nations Cup winners were always the same – Michael Schumacher and Sebastian Vettel. In the individual chase for the ROC trophy, Schumacher reached final two times but lost to Mattias Ekstrom both times.

David Coulthard’s celebration at ROC Barbados

David Coulthard came from retirement to victory

The 2013 Race of Champions was planned for December at Bangkok’s Rajamangala Stadium for the second time but the event was cancelled due to political unrest in Bangkok.

In 2014, all contestants traveled to Bushy Park at Barbados island. David Coulthard became the Champion of the Champions and the first ever winner who is actually the retired racing driver.

2017 Race of Champions at Miami’s Marlins Park

Montoya as the first non-European ROC winner

In 2015, again in London, Sebastian Vettel finally became the Champion of the Champions after six wins in the Nations Cup. In the next event, the ROC Miami in January 2017, Vettel won Nations Cup all-alone because his teammate Pascal Wehrlein was injured in a crash. Juan Pablo Montoya became the ROC winner in Miami, as the first ever winner who is not from Europe.

For the 2018 Race of Champions, the King Fahd International Stadium in Riyadh has been chosen as a new venue and the ROC became the first international motorsport event to be held in Saudi Arabia.

The 2018 ROC is the first international motorsport event in Saudi Srabia